"She was on fire," is how Vice Chancellor Jerome C. Vascellaro '74 put
it. He was referring to the tenor of President Ruth Simmons's annual
address to alumni on the Saturday of Commencement weekend. On Friday
the University had announced that the Campaign for Academic
Enrichment—aka the Boldly Brown campaign—had met its $1.4 billion goal
nineteen months before its December 2010 deadline. Also on Friday,
Simmons had helped break ground for the $40 million Perry and Marty
Granoff Creative Arts Center along the Pembroke Walk.

The news was not all good, however. The current economic
crisis has reduced Brown's endowment by 25 percent, and the
administration still needs to cut tens of millions of dollars from its
budget. Still, the economic downturn has made Brown's fund-raising
achievement all the more remarkable. No wonder Simmons seemed to be
fighting back tears as she addressed alumni beneath a tent on Lincoln
Field. "This is not a time for champagne receptions," she said. "Except
for today."

Last December, says the campaign's chief architect, Senior Vice
President for Development Ron Vanden Dorpel '71 AM, "we really kind of
fell off a cliff." But this spring brought a burst of donations, and at
its May 22 meeting the Corporation accepted $63 million in gifts and
pledges, including $30 million for financial aid from the Steven A. and
Alexandra M. Cohen Foundation. By June 30, the $1.4 mark had been met.

Four years ago, the goal seemed a stretch, says Matthew J. Mallow
'64, who cochairs the campaign with Vascellaro and Elizabeth Z. Chace
'59. "We spoke with fund-raising consultants at the start," Mallow
says. "By conventional measures we had the capacity to raise $1
billion; $1.4 billion was a bit of a leap of faith. But some of us were
confident that we could do it."

That confidence came from Simmons, University Chancellor Thomas J.
Tisch '77 told the alumni: "Before Ruth, people at Brown said, 'That's
a great idea; we can't afford to do it.' She said, 'That's a great
idea; we can't afford not
to do it.'" As a result, Tisch said, Brown now has need-blind
admissions; the number of endowed professorships has grown from 101 to
169; and the annual financial-aid budget has risen from $42 million to
$70 million.

Vascellaro attributes the campaign's success to the strong vision
behind Simmons's Plan for Academic Enrichment. "We have not raised
money for the sake of raising money," he says. "We raised it for the
plan: for financial aid, the faculty, a new home for the medical
school, new facilities. It's been thematic. When you go out and ask
people for time or money, you have to make sure that you are making
good use of that time and money. What you've seen this year is the
momentum of the plan."

Mallow says people have given for a range of emotional reasons as
well. "For a broad swath of donors it's about giving back. Some are
nostalgic for the formative role Brown played in their lives," he says.
"For Brown parents, it's thanks for what Brown is doing for their
kids." And then there's the appeal of Simmons herself. "Ruth strikes a
chord wherever she goes," he says. "Her own personal story is
absolutely compelling."

Vascellaro has called this "a campaign of discovery," and it has
been marked by surprises. First came the $100 million gift from liquor
magnate Sidney Frank '42, who couldn't afford to finish his own studies
at Brown. (The first forty-nine Sidney Frank Scholars—all exceptional
students from low-income families—were among this year's graduates.)
The campaign's second $100 million gift came from Warren Alpert, a
Rhode Islander who had no connection to Brown but wanted to support the
medical school.

Another piece of unlikely fortune followed the Smith Swim Center's roof
failure. "Then out of the blue comes this bequest [$14.5 million from
Raymond L. Moran '41] for an aquatics center," Simmons told the
Saturday morning crowd. Still another has been the generosity of
non-alumni parents, who contributed $168 million to the campaign. "It's
unique to have non-alumni parents giving at this level," says Vanden
Dorpel, citing the contributions of the Granoffs and Cohens, as well as
former trustee Charles Rosenthal.

Less surprising has been the generosity of former and current
Corporation members, who ponied up $428 million, or 31 percent of the
total. Every current Corporation member contributed, as did 96 percent
of emeriti. "This is quite impressive," Vanden Dorpel says. "The
governing body has taken ownership of Brown."

Perhaps the most striking aspect of this campaign has been its
success despite the worst economy since the Great Depression. Last
winter fund-raisers blanched, fearing cash-strapped donors would fail
to deliver on their pledges or stretch out payment schedules. But 99
percent of donors have continued to pay on time, Vanden Dorpel says.
"In fact," Mallow adds, "we've had more [people] asking if they should
accelerate to make up for lost endowment income."

Having met its goal early, the University is now looking to surpass
it. "We aren't resting on our laurels," Simmons told the alumni.
Fund-raisers believe they can raise another $275–$300 million by the
campaign's scheduled end in December 2010. Another $50–$75 million
would fund endowed professorships, and $114 million would bring the
financial-aid endowment up to the $400 million necessary to keep Brown
need-blind.

The Corporation is also committed to five construction projects that
will require $65 million to complete. Having abandoned plans to erect
new buildings for the medical school and mind, brain, and behavior
research, Brown will now remodel a building it owns in Providence's
Jewelry District for medical education and will rehab the Metcalf
complex of buildings on Thayer Street for mind, brain, and behavior.
The Stephen Robert '62 Student Center in Faunce House, the Nelson
Fitness Center, and the new aquatics center all need additional
funding.

The campaign has also boosted the Brown Annual Fund, which has
raised nearly $201 million; its original goal was $185 million. "We
have totally changed Brown's fund-raising expectations," Vascellaro
says, "Before this campaign, Brown raised about $60 million a year.
Over the past five years, we've brought in $250 million annually;
that's our run rate. We've got to continue that for-ever." He pauses
for a moment.

"Well, maybe go back to $200 million a year. The process of renewal is
ongoing. This is not a clock that you wind up and it runs forever."